html5-img
1 / 28

Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, Ph.D. Minnesota State University, Mankato

Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings. Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, Ph.D. Minnesota State University, Mankato Lauren Arbolino, Ph.D Nationwide Children’s Hospital. Introduction.

lev-weber
Télécharger la présentation

Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, Ph.D. Minnesota State University, Mankato

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, Ph.D. Minnesota State University, Mankato Lauren Arbolino, Ph.D Nationwide Children’s Hospital

  2. Introduction • Writing is considered an essential skill for children’s success. • Writing has been identified as a neglected skill (National Commission on Writing, 2003). • The writing skills of children in the United States has been summarized as • “. . . not what it should be” (p. 7)

  3. The Nation’s Report Card (2002) – Writing 3

  4. The Nation’s Report Card (2002) – Writing Two-thirds of students did notdemonstrate solid performance in writing Fourth-Grade Students 72% 28% One-third of the students demonstrated solid or superior performance in writing 4

  5. Academics & EBD • The relationship between emotional and behavioral disorders and low academic achievement has been well documented in the literature (Wehby et al, 2003). • Despite this, academic deficits of students with emotional and behavioral disorders is often secondary to behavior/emotional needs (Gunter & Denny, 1998)

  6. Academics & EBD • Historically, less emphasis on academics for EBD students • Problem behaviors are mitigated when students are engaged in instruction • Academic lesson and intervention must be instructionally appropriate • Reinforcement that is often and specific is effective

  7. Writing intervention for students with EBD • Recent research has sought to identify interventions to remediate academic skills for students with emotional and behavioral disorders. • Behavioral Disorders special issue • Reading • Writing

  8. The Nation’s Report Card: Implications Significant number of students have not developed mastery in basic writing skills Students at greatest risk for not developing mastery include: Eligible for free/reduced price lunch (83%) English Language Learners (93%) Eligible for special education services (83%) 8

  9. Research-Based Effective Teaching Strategies • Students learn more when they are actively engaged in instructional tasks • High success rates correlate positively with student learning outcomes • The more content covered, the greater the potential for student learning • Students become independent learners through instruction that is deliberate and carefully planned

  10. How Do We Improve Children’s Basic Writing Skills? Lower-order writing skills: Handwriting and spelling Capitalization, punctuation, and grammar Text generation Higher-order writing skills: Planning processes Text generation (increased expectations for amount, nature, quality) SOURCES: Berninger, V. W. et al. (2006). Tier 1 and Tier 2 early intervention for handwriting and composing. Journal of School Psychology, 44, 3-30.  Graham, S., & Harris, K. R. (2005). Improving the writing performance of young struggling writers. The Journal of Special Education, 39, 19-33.  10

  11. How Do We Improve Children’s Basic Writing Skills? Writing fluency: The total number of words written within 3 minutes 11

  12. How Do We Improve Children’s Writing Fluency? Provide instructional/performance feedback to promote children’s writing fluency Based on Thorndike’s law of effect (1898, 1911): Feedback serves to reinforce stimulus-response association 12

  13. Classwide Performance Feedback Study 11 week study 2 weeks for baseline; 9 weeks for intervention 4 Middle School classrooms 7 participants were assigned to the No Feedback Condition 8 participants were assigned to the Performance Feedback Condition Participants were probed once a week at the beginning of the class

  14. Results

  15. Choice v. No Choice Study 6 week study 1 Elementary School classroom 6 participants Administered either Choice or No Choice writing session All 6 participants performed better during the Choice condition 5 of 6 participants made more gains across time during the Choice condition

  16. Evidence Based Strategies • Give choice • Performance feedback • Student-interest driven materials • Peer learning activities • Self-monitoring • Tie-in with reinforcement

  17. Conclusions • Performance Feedback Study • ROI • No Feedback= 0.97 • Feedback= 3.81 • Choice Study • ROI • No Choice= 1.27 • Choice= 3.83

  18. Intervention Advantages • Monitoring • Clearly defined • Already a component of the classroom activities • Training • Length of time • Class-wide • Increased interest and motivation

  19. Future Directions • Replicate in different settings • Self contained class in public school • Inclusive • Evaluate benefits of reinforcement in combination with other interventions • Evaluate generalization of effects • Application of effective practices with EBD population • Mason et al., 2010 • Little et al., 2010

  20. Contact Information Carlos J. Panahon, PhD carlos.panahon@mnsu.edu Minnesota Sate University, Mankato Mankato, MN Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, PhD alexandra.panahon@mnsu.edu Minnesota State University, Mankato Mankato, MN Lauren A. Arbolino, PhD larbolino@gmail.com Nationwide Children’s Hospital Columbus, OH

More Related